In my lifetime as a Gen Xer, there are movies before Pulp Fiction, and there are movies after Pulp Fiction. I’ve always considered 1994 the year my passion for movie analysis began, and it’s all because of Pulp Fiction.
There is no doubt Quentin Tarantino belongs to the Greatest American Film Directors Club, and Scorsese, Coppola, and Spielberg should be greeters at the door (Big Kahuna Burgers served inside). Tarantino’s knack for non-sequential storytelling and intertwining narrative is impeccable and legitimately his. Cherry-topping that, his punchy dialogue fires as rapidly as the bullets that protrude through well-scripted characters you both love to love and love to loathe. Basically, you know when you are watching a Tarantino movie, and you know when other directors try to be Tarantino.
In 1994, Tarantino broke so much cinematic ground with Pulp Fiction that we forget how much of today’s spitfire scripts and ultra-violent, hipster movements in film wouldn’t have occurred without Samuel L. Jackson’s Ezekiel 25:17 monologue, John Travolta’s twist and scowl, Bruce Willis’s Hattori Hanzo sword, Uma Thurman’s adrenaline shot, and that ever so surprising, “accidental” bullet through Marvin’s face in the backseat of the Chevy Nova for The Wolf (Harvey Keitel) to help clean up.

Pulp Fiction’s envelopment of asynchrony is probably the most astonishing revelation in my movie viewing history.
How and why is John Travolta’s Vincent Vega still alive? Didn’t Bruce Willis just silence him on a toilet seat? With the events fluidly transitioning from beginning to end to middle, there is a subconscious yearning for characters who are no longer there. We are captivated by them because Quentin Tarantino makes them so colorful.

“Casting is 90%,” Tarantino always says.
Travolta’s career was resuscitated. Uma was super cool. Bruce took care of Zed. And, Samuel L. Jackson? Well, read his wallet. How about the hilariously deadpan cameo by Christopher Walken?
Add some crude humor, clever plot twists, and an eclectic soundtrack, and you’re in for an epigrammatic movie experience. Just let Dick Dale & His Del-Tones take you on a surf ride without an ocean while Bruce Willis counts “Flowers on a Wall” before running into Marsellus Wallace on the street.
Some say that’s Marsellus Wallace’s soul in the briefcase. Whatever it is, Pulp Fiction is Quentin Tarantino’s gem, and he’s got one more try at topping it. Along with 1999, 1994 is my favorite year for blowing the movies wide open, and Pulp Fiction pulled the trigger.

Reely Bernie Faves:
5. The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
6. The Godfather Part II (1974)
8. Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior (1981)
10. Nosferatu (1922)
11. Pollock (2000)
12. Kicking and Screaming (1995)
13. Jaws (1975)
14. Fargo (1996)
16. The Blair Witch Project (1999)
20. The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)
23. King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters (2007)
24. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
25. Bambi (1942)
26. The Paradise Lost Trilogy (1996-2011)
27. Psycho (1960)
29. Swingers (1996)
30. Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)
31. The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (2007)
32. Smoke (1995)
33. Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981)
35. Edward Scissorhands (1990)
37. 1917 (2019)
42. If Beale Street Could Talk (2018)
43. The Greatest Showman (2017)
44. National Lampoon’s Vacation (1983)
45. The Florida Project (2017)
It may be cliche but I think that The Matrix and Pulp Fiction are perhaps the two most most influential movies of the last 30 years.
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I think you are right on, actually—both narratively and stylistically speaking for sure!
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Right? How many action movies started? Shooting action sequences in slow motion? Or incorporating a “bullet time”? Granted, the matrix stole all of that from anime.
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And, I tell my students if they love anime so much, why haven’t they seen Akira?
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Thank you!!! This. All of this! You reach as well? What do you teach?
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Music! High school music for 20 years 🙂 Nostalgic ex-Blockbuster Video manager too!
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Nice! I’ve taught Midland high school English for about the same amount of time. After being in middle school for the last seven years, I’m back in high school this year.
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Nice to meet you, fellow teacher! We are a rare breed 🙂
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One of the very best. Very well written review.
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Thanks, Shane. A very personal favorite of mine with a beloved memory attached. For me, PTA hasn’t been able to top Magnolia.
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Pulp Fiction is Quentin Tarantino’s magnum opus. I wish I saw it sooner, but I knew his style of filmmaking would be a lot to take in as an adult. I saw his entire filmography 4 years ago for the first time. Pulp Fiction stood out the most for every unexpected narrative choice and quotable line. It’s just so clever.
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“Magnum opus” for sure. Yeah, my coworker friend saw it for the first time four years ago and didn’t have the context of the 1994 trailblazer effect. He liked it but had seen so many movies like it beforehand that the novelty of the original didn’t hit him like it did me. Pulp still holds up, and I’m not sure he will top it. My other personal faves are Kill Bill Vol. 2, Reservoir Dogs, and I think I was the only person to love The Hateful Eight, haha!
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I know I’ve ranked them before, but it’s been awhile. My ranking will probably be:
1. Pulp Fiction
2. Kill Bill Volume 1 & 2
3. Django Unchained
4. Inglourious Basterds
5. Reservoir Dogs
6. The Hateful Eight
7. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
8. Jackie Brown
9. Death Proof
I’m looking forward to The Movie Critic as it will be the only Quentin Tarantino movie I see in theaters. If the timing was better, I’d make it my 2,700th review. Not only is it another milestone, but my next Birthday as well. The title itself speaks to me as a movie critic.
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Great list! Mine is similar, except I’d swap Django with Hateful. Wow, the timing with The Movie Critic would be so cool! When does it premiere?
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It’s supposed to come out in 2024, but I doubt it’ll be before June 1st.
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Agreed. And, that’s fine: take your time, Quentin. We want it to be a perfect finale 🙂
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I don’t know what happened to my comment on your Empire Strikes Back post. But anyhows…
I saw Pulp Fiction as a 20 year-old in the cinema on Oxford Street in Sydney. I was probably in no state to see this since you need to have all your faculties at tip top especially on your first viewing. I didn’t like it the first time but of course on subsequent viewings having recuperated most of my senses I couldn’t help but admire it. I saw it again fairly recently and what blew me away was how masterful the screenplay is. I think this and Jackie Brown are his crowning director achievements. Kill Bill 2 is his movie I like to watch most of all but from a purely entertainment driven perspective.
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It is that kind of movie that kind of teaches you how to speak its language over time and more viewings. You might be an “older” dad like me. I realize the definition of “older dad” is subjective, but from what I gathered, we took more time than most (?). Also, funny you mention “entertaining” when talking about Kill Bill Vol. 2. I also think it’s one of his best, but I found it to be meditative and entrancing. It’s some of his best, slow-paced dialogue.
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I like your linguistic reference to Pulp.
I agree about the slow paced dialogue in KB2 although ironically I always saw it as a fast paced movie.
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Thanks, Matt. So funny different people’s perspectives: I thought Vol. 1 was fast-paced, and I wanted it to go faster to get to the end because I found the ultra violence boring. Vol. 2, on the other hand, I found slow, and I wanted it to go slower to enjoy more dialogue and hilarious setups.
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I must admit my favourite part of Part 1 was the Crazy 88 confrontation. I couldn’t fault KB2 on anything except that he was just starting to parody himself and being a bit too smart for his own good. Where Daryl Hannah’s character reads about the venom toxicity of the snake took me a bit out of the movie. Otherwise one of my favourite action thrillers.
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I loved the Uma Thurman breaking out of her coffin scene!
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My husband is always quoting this movie… 😅
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So many great lines. My dad and I do the same thing 🙂
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You’re absolutely right that modern cinema has a before PF and after PF defining line. I really enjoyed a lot of stuff in the wake of 1994 that has not aged as gracefully. It was like a scene akin to punk but for cinema.
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Yeah, talk about exploitation of hip violence: anything Guy Ritchie, Boondock Saints, 2 Days in the Valley, Things to Do in Denver… (though, I kinda liked this one), Freeway…
Love the punk analogy. What happened to ska? 😦
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I watched Boondock Saints and all I could think of was: This movie wants so badly to be Pulp Fiction. Right down to accidentally shooting the cat.
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You wouldn’t believe the ego of the idiot who directed Boondock Saints: https://boxd.it/1sHS
Such a rip-off.
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One of my favorite all time movies period. I love the time line in this movie…that is what makes it so cool. I always thought Reservoir Dogs was the perfect build up to this…I love that movie as well but he perfected it with this one.
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Great to have you back, buddy! Missed you. Yeah, R. Dogs is a fave of mine too, but Pulp perfects the Tarantino out of everything, I think. So much fun no matter where you are when it’s on. Sick soundtrack too.
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It was so nice coming back yesterday. Those movies are brother and sister to me….just like in my world…Rubber Soul and Revolver are…very much related.
Oh the soundtrack is great…when you make a Neil Diamond song cool…you are doing something….although they didn’t use his version.
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I’ll catch up to you soon. I like your brother/sister analogy. Yeah, how about that surf music too? How does that fit so well in the Tarantino world? Haha—you have so much love for music that it’s refreshing and reassuring you have dislikes too. Neil is one of mine, but he’s been warming up to me lately. “Shilo” is me as a kid, so I kind of get it.
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You might like yesterday….It fits becasue he said it fits lol. He also used “Rumble” I believe… a varied soundtrack…that is why I liked it.
Many of his movies looked so 1970s and then they would pull out a cell phone and break the illusion.
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Yeah. I’m sure you liked Jackie Brown. Such an overlooked gem 🙂 That music. That vibe.
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Love love love Jackie Brown. I also developed a huge crush on Pam Grier!
That movie might be my favorite and he really…and I mean this in a great way…”borrowed” from Superfly….that ending.
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